Publication | Closed Access
A single domain of yeast poly(A)-binding protein is necessary and sufficient for RNA binding and cell viability.
409
Citations
19
References
1987
Year
Molecular BiologyMolecular GeneticsYeast PolyRna BindingTranscriptional RegulationRna Binding ProteinsBinding SiteYeastPab TransferRna ProcessingRna BiologyGene ExpressionCell BiologyTranscription RegulationChromatinNatural SciencesSingle Domain66-Amino AcidCellular BiochemistryMedicine
The poly(A)-binding protein (PAB) gene of Saccharomyces cerevisiae is essential for cell growth. A 66-amino acid polypeptide containing half of a repeated N-terminal domain can replace the entire protein in vivo. Neither an octapeptide sequence conserved among eucaryotic RNA-binding proteins nor the C-terminal domain of PAB is required for function in vivo. A single N-terminal domain is nearly identical to the entire protein in the number of high-affinity sites for poly(A) binding in vitro (one site with an association constant of approximately 2 X 10(7) M-1) and in the size of the binding site (12 A residues). Multiple N-terminal domains afford a mechanism of PAB transfer between poly(A) strands.
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